Jet with ill boy quarantined, cleared in Las Vegas

LAS VEGAS (AP) — A commercial airliner was quarantined on the airport tarmac in Las Vegas for more than an hour Friday while paramedics and health officials evaluated a mother and a child who vomited during a flight from New York, authorities said.

An all-clear was given after officials determined the illness didn't meet criteria for Ebola.

The woman told authorities that she and the child had traveled in the African country of Gabon, Deputy Clark County Fire Chief Jeff Buchanan said.

Neither she nor the boy, about a year old, was hospitalized, Buchanan said. Their names were not made public.

McCarran International Airport officials said Delta Flight 495 from John F. Kennedy Airport was parked on the tarmac about 11 a.m. while officials from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Southern Nevada Health District responded.

The quarantine was ordered after authorities were told that a passenger who had recently traveled to Africa had vomited on board, airport spokeswoman Christine Crews said.

A CDC official said later that Gabon is not one of the West African countries affected by the Ebola outbreak.

The Boeing 737-800 flight had 166 passengers and crew members aboard, airline spokesman Morgan Durrant said. The passenger became sick within the last 30 minutes of the nearly four-hour flight, Durrant said.

The incident came a day before body-temperature checks begin for passengers arriving at Kennedy International from three West African countries experiencing the Ebola outbreak: Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Screenings are slated to begin next week at four other major airports: Newark Liberty, Washington's Dulles, Chicago's O'Hare and Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta airport.

The CDC says early symptoms of Ebola include fever greater than 101.5 degrees Fahrenheit, severe headache, muscle and stomach pain, weakness, diarrhea, vomiting and unexplained bleeding or bruising. Symptoms may appear anywhere from two to 21 days after exposure to the virus, but the average is eight to 10 days.